| Personally, I felt more excited about my babies after I knew the sex so I could talk about them by name and imagine their futures. It made me feel more connected to my pregnancies. |
I imagine that would be such a special moment for a new father. It's like his version of getting to share the "I'm pregnant" news. Really sweet and special. |
I intentionally didn't find out in part because of this-- had a miscarriage and a friend with a baby lost at 39 weeks (emergency c section and lived a week... ). I mean a loss is devasting no matter what but I didn't want to get AS emotionally invested until they were in my arms. The only real con for us was i had to prep for both a potential bris and baby naming (we're Jewish)- nearly everything else can happen after the fact. In Jewish custom you're not supposed to buy stuff for baby in advance anyway (and we had plenty of hand me downs of both genders)- so there was lots of angst with my husband about a bris that we fortunately didn't need- but now we've done the research and have a plan in case next kid is a boy. I had at least 8 ultrasounds and NIPT- there was a simple thing we checked with doing NIPT to select don't share gender- we could still find out results immediately on portal without seeing gender. At our first ultrasound they asked us if we wanted to know the sex and marked no on our emr and they'd confirm that at each scan. Was never an issue. The ultrasound techs always would tell us when to close our eyes during scans but still showed us all the relevant health stuff. It was a very special moment when we found out the sex at birth. |
I felt opposite- I remember a colleague coming into work crying when she found out the gender and having to comfort her that she'd love the kid when he was born (which totally happened and I've never heard her mention disappointment once alive) and figured when I had a baby in my arms I would be too in love to have any emotion either way about gender. |
One of life's most beautiful and wonderful surprises. |
| We didn't find out, and there was zero downside for us. |
| We did not find out. The hospital staff was so excited that it would be a surprise. I would have found out for #2 so we could have told #1 about his brother/sister but DH wanted another surprise. |
| I'm not fixated on my kids' genitalia. |
| Some tech or doctor may accidentally slip one day and you’ll find out in a way or time you don’t expect. That happened to me. It was frustrating. Obviously not the biggest problem in the world, but mistakes happen. |
| We didn’t want to know but some techs aren’t careful. “Haha, don’t look now because you’ll definitely know which sex!!” |
| The baby felt more real after finding out the sex. It was also easier to design the nursery and buy clothes. |
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We didn’t find out until DC was born AND I’m feeling a little snarky tonight, so take the following with a grain of salt:
Con: Suffering through condescending / self-congratulatory remarks from other newish moms along the lines of, “Oh, I’m such a planner, I just had to find out in advance!” (Implying I was not planning/preparing because I didn’t know the sex.) Pro: The satisfaction of knowing you would ace the marshmallow test and that you’ll nurture this skill in your progeny.
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Unless you think that toys/colors are for certain genders only there are no cons.
We adopted and only had 8 days notice. So many people had given us stuff because they knew we were going waiting. We were set, colors didn’t matter.. |
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When I had my first 16 years ago, we were on the fence of whether we wanted to know beforehand; but my older sister’s advice was that it’s going to be a surprise anytime you find out and you’re gonna have that same joy at 14 weeks or 40 weeks. In fact, on the baby’s birthdate, the baby is the biggest surprise of all because even if you already know the sex, you don’t know the baby you haven’t seen the baby and soaking all of that in is a lot. So we found out early, We shared with the grandparents and the great grandparents and the aunts and uncles, and that was a mini celebration. We Referred to the baby by name and gender inutero. We celebrated our daughter at the shower and finally when she was born, we were able to focus on celebrating her. this made my entire pregnancy special with me not just looking forward to the birth. Also my family was able to celebrate it all with us. |
| the names - it was hell trying to come up with a name - cant imagine trying to think of two names. |